From Album 2000 [pay00] -
National Flag (CSW/CSW 1:2) - Green flag with yellow-black-white
corss and red disk with 10 yellow bordered green stars and
sisserou parrot (loking towards hoist). The construction details
are given beside the figure as (9+2+2+2+9):(21+2+2+2+21).
Measuring the image in Album 2000, the disk diameter apears to be
equal to 12 units (i.e. double the three stripes width). It is
hard to judje the size of the stars, they apear to be inscribed
in circles larger then 2 units, but weather they'll be 3, I
couldn't say. maybe the document from which Armand got the rest
of the construction would say more. I doubt that the size of
yellow border is prescribed. The use of unusual colours in this
flag might be a good reson to
quote the colour approximation provided in Album: green Pantone
347c, red Pantone 185c. yellow Pantone 116c and purple Pantone
254c.eljko Heimer, 15 June 2001

Is there some branch under the parrot and what is the
orientation of stars?
Note: The Sisserou parrot is, scientifically, Amazona Imperialis.Jan Zrzavy, 16 June 2001

The image by Carlos Esparza is very well done regarding the
details in the disk (however, the cross is not quite according to
the Album secification, though). So the stars are pointing
"outwards" but that virtually means that the topmost
star is pointing upwards and then interchangably next one is
pointing downwards, and next one upwards again and so on. There
is a yellow branch on which the parror is sitting (not brownish
as by Carlos). The beak and "fingers" are white (or
very light yellow?) in Album, and those parts that are in Carlo's
image blue are purple in Album. There should not be the small
green part between the two purple parts (near the beak) - all
should be purple there.
I always wandered - Dominica was under British colonial
influencem, so how come that they never adopted anything similar
to the British rich flags & ensigns system?eljko Heimer, 16 June 2001

We say on our website: "The ten lime green stars - the
traditional symbol of hope - represent the ten parishes of the
country". According to Encyclopaedia Universalis
Yearbook, the ten parishes are: St. Andrew St. David, St.
George (including the capital city Roseau), St. John, St. Joseph,
St. Luke, St. Mark, St. Patrick, St. Paul and St. Peter.Ivan Sache, 15 June 2004

I see the common name used in Dominica to call the Amazona
imperialis, followed by a scientific binomial name is Sisserou
Parrot (Psittacus Imperiala) (see Official
Announcement of the Flag at Independence). Zoologically,
nowadays the name "Psittacus imperialia" doesn't exist
and isn't accepted as the correct Linnean name of the parrot is
Amazona imperialis, Richmond 1899. (The Genus Psittacus contains
just one specie, which is Psittacus erithacus, Linneus 1758; the
African grey parrot).Francesco Dalba, 28 September 2004

The flag of the Commonwealth of Dominica consists of a
circular emblem of red bearing a Sisserou parrot (Amazona
imperialis) standing on a twig encircled by ten lime
green stars. This is superimposed on three vertical and
three horizontal stripes of yellow, black and white
forming a triple coloured cross against a general
background of forest green.

The central emblem presents the National Bird of
Dominica, the Sisserou parrot, also a symbol of flight
toward greater heights and fulfilment of aspiration. The
Parrot also comes from the Dominica Coat of Arms, thus
symbolising the official Seal of the country.

The ten lime green stars- the traditional symbol of hope
represent the ten parishes of the country, each with
equal status, thus the equality of our people. The red
central emblem symbolises Dominica's commitment to social
justice.

The yellow, black and white stripes from a triple
coloured cross representing the Trinity of God. The cross
itself demonstrates belief in God since the Commonwealth
of Dominica is founded upon the principles that
acknowledge the supremacy of God.

The yellow stripe represents the sunshine of our land,
our main agricultural produce: Citrus and Bananas; and is
also a symbol of the Carib and Arawak people, the first
inhabitants of the Island.

The White stripe represents the clarity of our rivers and
waterfalls and the purity of aspiration of our people.

The black stripe represents the rich black soil of our
island on which our agriculture is based as well as our
African heritage.

The general background of dark green symbolizes our rich
verdant forest and the general lushness.

A government
site that I found states, in part: "The flag of the
Commonwealth of Dominica consists of a circular emblem of red
bearing a Sisserou Parrot standing on a twig encircled by ten
lime green stars", and the pictured image does show this.David Kendall, 5 May 2005

image by Carlos Esparza and J. Patrick Fischer,
5 May 2005

A friend brought me a national flag directly from Dominica.
This flag has only a thin black line around the stars. I checked
several flag books and I guess I know, where this mistake came
from. Green at prints is made by printing bluie and yellow
colour. If the print is not well done (especially at small
images), there could be a small area at the green stars, which
looks like a yellow fimbriation.
In my Dominican flag:
- No yellow fimbriation at the stars. A thin black line instead.
- the stars are smaller, maybe half the size.
- Bill and feet of the parrot are white
- the Wood is yellow
- the parrot is purple, not blue. The colour shade is not easy to
hit.
- no nose hole in the bill
The flag was bought last year at Dominica.J. Patrick Fischer, 5 May 2005

I have only a copy of the 1978 Act that established the flag
(which makes no mention of a yellow fimbriation as we know), and
had assumed (apparently mistakenly) that the yellow had been
added with the alterations of 1981?
The only comment I wanted to make was that, with the site sent by
David and the flag by Jans-Patrick, we now have two further sizes
for the cross and red disk - 22.5% and 55%, plus 33.33% and
60%. (as against the 25% and 50% given by ourselves
and the Album, and 30% and 50% by the Flag Institute).Christopher Southworth, 5 May 2005

The national flag shown on Dominican government site
is a former flag since order of triband and parrot's position are
different from present one and I found a present flag on the same
website named Independence 25 at <www.avirtualdominica.com>.
The flag has yellow fimbrication to 10 stars.
The flag chart of U.N.members which I bought in U.N. h/o New York
in July 2003 shows yellow fimbriation, same as that of Dominican
government website Independence 25.Nozomi Kariyasu, 5 and 8 May 2005

The official dominica website shows no red portion of the
wing, no red eye, not a yellow branch but gold beak and claws,
not gray. Plus, nobody is sure of the diameter of the
red circle. The official Dominica site says the stars are
LIME-GREEN, while the background is dark forest-green - no
lime-green stars shown on any sites I've seen.Peter Orenski, 5 May 2005

Now things are really getting complicated. The version at <www.avirtualdominica.com>
shows for the first time a parrot with a green head! Well, the
living bird has a blue-violett head. <www.rarespecies.org> and
same at the link "Our national symbols" at the same homepage.
Here the yellow fimbriation is missing again. Nothing about this
in the explaination at this homepage.J. Patrick Fischer, 5 May 2005

We have no details on the major features - we have several
different sizes for the cross and disk, differing versions of the
parrot, no size for the stars at all and the official
illustration which shows no fimbriation is in the wrong ratio.
I did have a copy of the official description for
"Lime and Forrest Green":
Act No. 18 of 1978, The National Emblems of Dominica Act, signed
31 October 1978, Gazetted 1 November 1978 and effective 3
November 1978.
The Schedule, Part II: "The following is a description of
the National Flag of Dominica:- Vert three pallets conjoined in
pale and as many bars simililarly conjoined in fess or argent and
sable overall a roundle gules charged with a Sisserou Parrot
(Psittacus imperialis) facing sinister perched on a wooden twig
proper within a orle of ten mullets. Also vert."
The description of the arms gives further details on the parrot
as follows: "proper beaked and membered or" but as you
see no such description is given for the flag.
Just to add a little more to the prevailing confusion about this
flag,at the website
of the High Commission in London we have another image with
yellow fimbriation to the stars. This time the cross
is at 30% and the disk at 55% which gives us yet another layout.Christopher Southworth, 6 May 2005

I am awaiting confirmation but it would appear that the yellow
fimbriation was indeed dropped on 3 November 1990 (as well as
alterations made to the parrot). We see what we expect to see,
and I hadn't noticed that Alfred Znamierowski's book "the
world encyclopedia of flags" page 204 also shows plain green
stars and gives 3 November 1990 as the date of the current.flag.Christopher Southworth, 8 May 2005

The flag bulletin XXII:/6/102" of November-December 1983
informs that "Exactly after three years of attainment of
independence - on 3 November 1981 - a revised form of the
national flag was introduced" and "the disk is
two-thirds the width of the flag".Martin Grieve, 8 May 2005

When I prepared the 2nd edition of my book Lexikon vlajek a
znaku zemi sveta [brz98c]
in 2003, I tried to solve the problem of the yellow fimbriation
and sent several letters to Dominica. I got the answer from the
Dominica Academy of Arts & Sciences that the stars are
without the fimbriation in a letter of 25 July 2003.Ales Brozek, 9 May 2005

Roberto Breschi has very kindly sent me a copy of the 1991
Article from The Flag Bulletin on this very subject, and this
says that: "The parrot had its colouring modified to
correspond more closely to the appearance of the national bird
(the sisserou or imperial parrot). The stars surrounding the bird
originally were 'lime green' instead of the dark green of the
flag background. In the second and third versions of the flag the
stars became dark green but had fimbriations in
yellow. These fimbriations, not mentioned in the
official blazon, have now been omitted".
In the meantime there seems no doubt that the stars no longer
have a yellow fimbriation, and (something of which I was also
unaware) that the stars became dark green between 1981 and
1988. Christopher Southworth, 9 May 2005

The protocol manual for the
London 2012 Olympics
(Flags and Anthems Manual
London 2012 [loc12]) provides recommendations
for national flag designs. Each
NOC
was sent an image of the flag, including the
PMS shades, for their approval by LOCOG. Once this was obtained, LOCOG produced
a 60 x 90 cm version of the flag for further approval. So, while these specs may
not be the official, government, version of each flag, they are certainly what
the NOC
believed the flag to be.
For Dominica: PMS 347 green, 185 red, 116 yellow, 254 purple, 430 grey and
black. The vertical flag is simply the horizontal version turned 90 degrees
clockwise.Ian Sumner, 10 October 2012

The new Dominica independence flag is now on display at
Government headquarters. Dominicans are invited to view the flag
on the third floor of the building.

The flag in an amendment of a design submitted by Alwin Bully
for a flag competition held early this year. It consists of a
circular emblem of red bearing a Sisserou Parrot (Psittacus
Imperiala) standing on a twig encircled by ten lime green stars.
This is superimposed on three vertical and three horizontal
stripes of yellow, white and black forming a triple coloured
cross against a general background of forest green.

The central emblem presents the National Bird of Dominica, the
Sisserou Parrot, also a symbol of flight towards greater heights
and fulfilment of aspirations. The Parrot also comes from the
Dominica Coat of Arms thus symbolising the official seal of the
country.

The ten lime green stars - the traditional symbol of hope -
represent the ten parishes of the country, each with equal
status, thus the equality of our people. The red central emblem
carries the connotation of socialism.

The yellow, white and black stripes form a triple coloured
cross representing the Trinity of God. The cross itself
demonstrates belief in God since the Commonwealth of Dominica is
founded upon principles that acknowledge the supremacy of God.

The yellow stripe represents the sunshine of our land, our
main agricultural products: citrus and bananas and also a symbol
of the Carib people, the first inhabitants of the Island.

The white stripe represents the clarity of our rivers and
waterfalls and the purity of aspirantion of our people.

The black stripe represents the rich black soil of our island
on which our agriculture is based and also our African heritage.

The general background of dark green symbolises our rich
verdunt forests and the general lushness of the island.

The flag can be seen during normal working hours. Citizens
may, if they so desire, use the colours of the flag for making
buntings to decorate their houses and surroundings during
Independence Celebrations.

"The army loyal to the Prime Minister Mary Eugenia
Charles represses a revolt lead by the ex-commander-in-chief
of Dominican Army Frederik Newton and by his vice Ashton
Benjamin; they are arrested together with more than 90
people. The rebels tried to assail the prison in which there
was the ex-Prime Minister Patrick John, who was arrested on
12 February 1981"

So I argue that the little change of the flag is someway related
with the change of government happened in the same year. Giuseppe Bottasini

I take it that these are governmental designations rather than
ecumenical (i.e., the parishes are not literally church parishes,
but are administrative divisions).James Dignan, 15 June 2004

They are listed in Encyclopaedia Universalis Yearbook as
administrative divisions but they probably match church
divisions. Religion seems to be very important in those Caribbean
islands and it is not so surprising that the administrative
divisions are called parishes.Ivan Sache, 16 June 2004